Sutter Butte Canal Co. v. Railroad Commision

259 P. 937, 202 Cal. 179, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 330
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1927
DocketDocket No. S.F. 12070.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 259 P. 937 (Sutter Butte Canal Co. v. Railroad Commision) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutter Butte Canal Co. v. Railroad Commision, 259 P. 937, 202 Cal. 179, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 330 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

By this proceeding petitioner seeks to have reviewed and annulled a decision and order of the Railroad Commission, designated decision No. 16289, made on March 20, 1926, relating to its water rates, complaint being made of the valuation of its property for rate-fixing purposes, the rate of return thereon and the modification and practical abrogation of certain continuous contracts for the furnishing of water held by it with a certain class of consumers.

In previous decisions this court has had occasion to outline the history of petitioner as a public utility engaged in the business of appropriating water from the Feather River and selling and distributing the same for irrigation purposes in Butte and Sutter Counties, in this state, and reference is made to the statements of fact set forth therein (Butte County Water Users Assn. v. Railroad Com., 185 Cal. 218 [196 Pac. 265], Ring v. Railroad Com., 190 Cal. 321 [212 Pac. 200], and Live Oak Water Users Assn. v. Railroad Com., 192 Cal. 132 [219 Pac. 65]).

Petitioner, a public utility, admittedly subject to the power of the Railroad Commission, is in possession of a water right dedicated to the public use. Its consumers are divided into two classes—contract consumers and noncontract consumers. Water was originally furnished to the contract consumers under so-called “Water Right Contracts,” or continuous supply contracts, whereby the consumer paid an initial amount, usually $10 per acre, for the *182 privilege of obtaining the contract, and agreed to pay a stipulated rate for irrigation water service each year thereafter upon the total acreage covered by the contract, and the company on its part agreed to furnish water as required for all of the acres covered thereby. Noncontract consumers, or applicants, pursuant to order of the Commission made in March, 1918, were served upon the basis only of applications for water made from year to year. This dual situation has existed since 1918 and the Railroad Commission has attempted to solve the problem presented by these two classes of consumers by various orders and decisions, the last two of which, the one here involved and the one prior thereto, may be briefly described as follows:

Decision No. 14422, rendered on December 31, 1924, after application by petitioner for a further increase, in the water rates, increased the 1922 rates and abolished the differential in rates between contract and noncontract holders. It established a standby or service charge of $1.25 per acre, payable by both classes, effective as to noncontract holders for all of their lands covered by their applications during such time as they should continue on thereunder, and in any event for not less than three years, and to be continuously effective as to contract holders for all of the lands covered by their contracts, provided, however, by rule 3', that if such contract holder does not desire to use in any year the whole or any of said water which he is so entitled to receive, and “files with the company on or before February 1st of that year notice in writing of what he does desire in respect to the non-service of water, he shall then be obligated to pay in that year, and in each year thereafter in which said notice remains in effect, on or before February 1st thereof, the service charge of $1.25 per acre of the land for which no water is desired as specified in said notice, and, as to the remainder of his land, such rates or charges based upon the extent and character of use of the water which he desires to use, as are in effect.”

Thereafter, and in 1925, the proceeding which resulted in decision 16289, the validity of which is here involved, was “instituted on the Commission’s own motion for the purpose of making a complete and new investigation of the rates, charges, classifications, contracts, rules, regulations and service of the Sutter Butte Canal Company, in view of the de *183 velopment of considerable protest and dissatisfaction following the fixing of rates on the Sntter Butte Canal Company system by this Commission in Decision No. 14422 dated December 31, 1924.”

Said decision modified the previous rules so as to give to each continuous contract holder the right, at his option, either (1) to obtain water under applications for so much of his land as he desired to irrigate, similarly with applicants generally who were not holders of continuous contracts,- or (2) to obtain water under his continuous contract, provided that if he so elects, he may still, by notifying petitioner that he does not desire “to use in any year the whole or any of the water which he is so entitled to receive, and files with the Company on or before February 1st of that year notice in writing of what he does desire in respect to che non-service of water, he shall then be obligated in that year, and in the next succeeding year thereafter, but for no further period in which said notice remains in effect to pay, on or before February 1st thereof, the service charge of $1.25 per acre of the land for which no water is desired, as specified in said notice ... or (3) to release himself from any obligation to pay any charge to petitioner under his continuous contract by giving notice that he does not desire any water for his land in any year, or to neither give notice nor use the water.

The substance of the order here under consideration is to pave the way for the release of all contract consumers. It is true that the contracts may be retained at the election of the consumer but the whole plan is in reality, when stripped of its complications, an effort by the Railroad Commission to abolish all distinction between the two classes of consumers and to put them upon a parity in order that there may be removed from the controversy this source of friction and trouble.

The Commission in this behalf, among other things, said: “Rates fixed herein will, therefore, be on the basis that all service be charged for under a unifrom schedule of rates and under application forms which will exclude any consideration of the continuous contract and preclude the making of charges for unirrigated lands under said contracts, as such.”

*184 The controlling question in the proceeding is, therefore, the extent of the power that may be exerted by the Railroad Commission upon the contracts between petitioner and the contract consumers. The police power is one of the attributes of state sovereignty and cannot be limited by contract. It operates upon property and property rights, including contracts, to the extent necessary for the protection of the public health, safety, morals, and welfare. To the Railroad Commission has been committed the execution of this power over public utilities in California. The scope of this power is defined in the state constitution as follows:

Section 23, article XII: “Every private corporation, and every individual or association of individuals, owning, operating, managing or controlling any . . . canal, pipe-line, plant or equipment, or any part of such . . . canal, pipeline, plant or equipment within this state, . . . for the production, generation, transmission, delivery or furnishing of heat, light, water or power . . . either directly or indirectly, to or for the public ...

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Bluebook (online)
259 P. 937, 202 Cal. 179, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutter-butte-canal-co-v-railroad-commision-cal-1927.